lbBL. This root should be conceived according to its two ways of composition: by the first, the rootla, which designates elevation, power, etc., is united to the sign of interior activityb; by the second, it is the sign of extensive movementl, which is contracted with the rootab, whose use is, as we have seen, to develop all ideas of progression, gradual advance, etc.; so that it is, in the first case, a dilating force, which acting from the centre to the circumference, augments the volume of things, causing a kind of bubbling, swelling; whereas in the second it is the thing itself which is transported or which is overthrown without augmenting in volume.

lkThat which is integral, entire, absolute, perfect, total, universal: that which consumes, concludes, finishes, totalizes a thing; that which renders it complete, perfect, accomplished; which comprises, contains it, in determining its accomplishment: the universality of things; their assimilation, aggregation, perfection; the desire of possessing; possession; a prison: the consumption of foods, their assimilation with the substance of the body, etc.

@kCHPH. Every idea of curvature, concavity, inflection; of a thing capable of containing, holding: in a restricted sense, palm of the hand, sole of the foot, talons, claws of an animal, a spoon; that which curves like a sleeve, a branch: that which has capacity, like a stove, a spatula, etc.

The Arabic (arabic font) contains exactly the same ideas as the Hebraic root. As verb, and in a figurative sense, (arabic font) signifies to preserve, defend, keep.

@WkAction of bending, being inflected, made concave, etc.

Demolire

De+molire

(De in funzione privativa

ML

lm

lmML. The sign of exterior and passive action. united by contraction to the rootla, symbol of every elevation and every extent, composes a root to which is attached all ideas of continuity, plentitude, continued movement from the beginning to the end of a thing: thence, the accessory ideas of locution, elocution, eloquence, narration, etc.

lmThat which is full, entirely formed; that which attained its complement: that which is continued without lacunas; every kind of locution, narration, oration; a term, an expression.

Filosofia

PL+SF

(PH+SPH)

@vlp

lpPHL. The emphatic sign, united by contraction to the rootla, symbol of every elevation, constitutes a root which develops all ideas of distinction, privilege, choice, election, setting aside: thence,

lpSome thing wonderful, precious, which is considered a mystery: a miracle: a distinguished, privileged man whom one reveres; a noble, a magistrate; that which is set aside, hidden in all fruits, the germ; literally, a bean.

The Arabic (arabic font) has not preserved the moral ideas developed by the Hebrew. This root, inclining toward the physical sense, is limited to expressing that which is separated, extracted, drawn from another thing: that which is divided into distinct parts. In the modern idiom (arabic font) signifies literally to drive away.

llp(intens.) From the idea of noble and magistrate, springs that of dominion, power: thence, the action of judging others, rendering justice, governing, etc.

@vSHPH. Every apparent, eminent, distinguished, prominent object: that which extends beyond, as a hill; appears on top, as cream, etc.

The Arabic (arabic font) designates in general that which becomes limpid, clear, transparent.

@sThe extremity of a thing, the point where it ceases; its achievement, consummation, end: the defection, the want of this thing: the border, top, summit, threshold; that which commences or terminates a thing; that which is added for its perfection: also, reiteration of the same action, an addition, supplement; the final thing where many others come to an end: a time involving many actions.

Gigante

G+G+AN

!ag

gGH. As grammatical sign, it expresses organic development and produces all ideas originating from the corporeal, organs and from their action.

agGA. The organic signgunited to the potential signga, constitutes a root which is attached to all ideas of aggrandizement, growth, organic development, augmentation, magnitude.

hg,WgandygGHE, GOU and GHI. The organic sign united either to that of life, or to that of universal convertible force, or to that of manifestation, constitutes a root which becomes the symbol of every organization. This root which possesses the same faculties of extension and aggrandizement that we have observed in the rootagcontains ideas apparently opposed to envelopment and development, according to the point of view under which one considers the organization.

hhgThat which organises; that which gives life to the organs: health, and metaphorically, medicine.

hWgEvery kind of organ dilated to give passage to the vital spirits, or closed to retain them: every expansion, every conclusion: that which serves as tegument; the body, in general; the middle of things: that which preserves them as, the sheath of a sword; etc.

ggGG. Every idea of elasticity; that which stretches and expands without being disunited.

!aIn a broader sense, it is the sphere of moral activity; in a restricted sense, it is the body of the being.

Gobba

GB

bg

bgGB. The organic sign united by contraction to the rootba, symbol of every fructification, develops, in general, the idea of a thing placed or coming under another thing.

bgA boss, an excrescence, a protuberance: a knoll, an eminence; the back; everything convex.

Gremire

G+RM

~rg

gGH. As grammatical sign, it expresses organic development and produces all ideas originating from the corporeal, organs and from their action.

agGA. The organic signgunited to the potential signga, constitutes a root which is attached to all ideas of aggrandizement, growth, organic development, augmentation, magnitude.

~rRM The sign of movement proper considered in its abstract mode, or in its different radical modifications,ar,hr,Wr,xr,yrbeing here universalized by the collective sign~, designates that sort of movement or action, by means of which any thing whatsoever, rising from the centre to one of the points of the circumference, traverses or fills an extent or place, which it has not occupied previously.

~ror~mr(intens.) That which is borne upward, which rises, dilates, mounts, projects, shoots up, increases rapidly, follows a movement of progression and ascension.

~WrAction of rising by expanding, of filling space; action of being lifted up, in speaking of anything whatever; state of being in effervescence; the superior part of a thing; height, sublimity.

Grosso

G+RS

vrg

gGH. As grammatical sign, it expresses organic development and produces all ideas originating from the corporeal, organs and from their action.

agGA. The organic signgunited to the potential signga, constitutes a root which is attached to all ideas of aggrandizement, growth, organic development, augmentation, magnitude.

vrRSH. The sign of movement proper, united to that of relative movement, constitutes a root which is hieroglyphically symbolized by a point at the middle of a circle: it is the centre unfolding the circumference: the fundamental principle.

varEvery acting principle, good or bad; a venomous poison, a very bitter, gall; that which is primary, initial; the origin, summit, top; the culminating point of all things; the head of man or of anything whatsoever; the leader of a people, a captain, a prince, a king.

Leccare

LQ

ql

qlLCQ. In a literal sense, that which is seized by the tongue, that which is lapped, licked: figuratively, that which is seized by the mind, a lesson, a lecture, an instruction.

The Arabic (arabic font) signifies to chew, and (arabic font), as onomatopoetic root denotes every kind of slapping, clapping, clicking.

Modo

Md

dm

dmMD. The sign of exterior action, being united to that of elementary division, constitutes that root whence come all ideas of measure, dimension, mensuration, commensurable extent, and in a metaphorical sense, those of custom, rule, condition.

Molto

ML+T

atlm

lmML. The sign of exterior and passive action. united by contraction to the rootla, symbol of every elevation and every extent, composes a root to which is attached all ideas of continuity, plentitude, continued movement from the beginning to the end of a thing: thence, the accessory ideas of locution, elocution, eloquence, narration, etc.

lmThat which is full, entirely formed; that which attained its complement: that which is continued without lacunas; every kind of locution, narration, oration; a term, an expression.